and have a login page unique to each domain, i.e. webmail.domain1.com, webmail.domain2.com, etc.

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Not easily possible since the login page you see is server-wide. However, you may be able to install a separate instance of SquirrelMail on each domain - probably a lot of work tho!

One other option would be to create a login form that sits on a page in the public_html folder of your domains. Make the form post the username/password to webmail.domain.com, so you can customise the look of the page. Users will still be able to see the standard webmail login page if they login via the standard url.

One other option would be to create a login form that sits on a page in the public_html folder of your domains. Make the form post the username/password to webmail.domain.com, so you can customise the look of the page. Users will still be able to see the standard webmail login page if they login via the standard url.

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That's a very good idea.

I guess I need to look at the Squirrel Mail documentation and see how they pass the variables. Probably a standard username, password combo - but I see what you say.